Cincy sends Jimenez packing
By Hal McCoy
Dayton Daily News
CINCINNATI | D'Angelo Jimenez is the first casualty in the Cincinnati Reds' so-far losing war against mediocrity.
Stressing that Jimenez is not the complete parcel when blame is passed around, general manager Dan O'Brien Friday designated for assignment the 27-year-old infielder.
Jimenez was signed last winter to a one-year $2.87 million contract, although some club insiders advised against it.
O'Brien, at the request of manager Dave Miley, in effect admitted the mistake and granted his manager his wish to rid the roster of the pouty, non-hustling Jimenez. And it could cost the club close to $2 million.
The team has 10 days to trade Jimenez, an unlikely scenario. The club could put him on waivers and another team could claim him, Jimenez could declare free agency or he could accept an assignment to the Reds minor-league system.
Unless the Reds trade him, they are on the hook to pay him nearly $2 million.
And O'Brien indicated more moves are not only possible, but likely.
Jimenez incurred the wrath of Miley Wednesday in New York during a 10-6 loss to the Mets. First, he made two errors, one on which he tried to throw out a runner from his knees when he had time to scramble to his feet and make the throw.
The throw across his body from his knees was 8 feet wide of first baseman Sean Casey and a run scored.
More glaring, though, was when he tried to score from second base on a short single to left field by pitcher Eric Milton. The throw beat him and he didn't slide, running stand-up into the tag.
Jimenez, acquired from the Chicago White Sox in July, 2003, was in a fight with teammate Ryan Freel last year during a season-ending team party in Milwaukee, and was not a popular figure in the clubhouse.
O'Brien was enamored with him because he led the National League in most pitches seen per at-bat, but also had a penchant for taking called third strikes after which he glared at or argued with the umpires nearly every time.
"Dave Miley and I visited regarding this move and he made a recommendation that this move be made," said O'Brien. "We support it and we're moving forward."
The move forward remains to be seen, but it is a corrective step. Several players suggested the move amongst themselves as long as two weeks ago.
"It's all about performance and it wasn't happening," O'Brien said of Jimenez's .229 average, 0 homers, 5 RBIs and 23 strikeouts in 105 at-bats.
"It is important to point out that the performance of the team does not rest on D'Angelo Jimenez's shoulders, but we have to make changes and we have to do things to try to get better," O'Brien said.
Other changes? Stay tuned?
"Stay tuned is an apropos line," said O'Brien. "This was a potentially significant financial decision. Not to say that finances aren't always, or should be, a consideration. We're trying to get better.
"If we have to make difficult decisions, we're prepared to do it," he said. "On the pitching front, there are a lot of factors because we have a number of pitchers on the disabled list (Ben Weber, Luke Hudson, Josh Hancock, J.K. Bong), so the picture isn't as clear there as it was on the position players."
"After what happened Wednesday, well, obviously performance and some other things were factors," Miley said of the Jimenez decision. "Basically, D'Angelo wasn't bringing it. I made the recommendation that we had to make a move and Dan was fully supportive."
To replace Jimenez, the Reds purchased the contract of Luis Lopez from Class AAA Louisville, where he was hitting .264. The 34-year-old infielder played 23 games at shortstop and two games at second base.
He has played 704 major-league games for San Diego, the New York Mets, Milwaukee and Baltimore.